Abstract

Effects of pH and ionic strength on phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine mixed membranes prepared on Millipore filter pore surfaces have been studied using spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine. Lowering pH at constant ionic strength and lowering ionic strength at constant pH caused a lateral reorganization of the membrane. The trigger was protonation of the serine carboxyl group which caused solidification of phosphatidylserine molecules in the membrane, leaving a fluid phase consisting mainly of phosphatidylcholine. The apparent pK for the proton-induced phase separation was measured in a wide range of salt concentrations. The ionic strength dependence was satisfactorily explained based on the electrostatic free energy of proton in the field of membrane surface potential. The Gouy-Chapman theory gave a good approximation for the surface potential. The surface pK of phosphatidylserine and phosphatidic acid vesicles was directly measured in various salt concentrations by 31P-NMR and the results confirmed validity of the Gouy-Chapman-type analysis. The lateral reorganization was triggered by electrostatic interaction but the bulk of the stabilization energy for the structural change would be the gains in intermolecular van der Waals energy due to closer packing of phosphatidylserine on solidification.

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